Like I wrote above, my research tells me the OP's preamplifier avoids use of a coupling capacitor by virtue of having a servo mechanism to balance out DC offset at its outputs. Right there, that ought to prevent DC from getting to the woofer. But if one wants to insist on a DC origin, then you have to postulate that the DC is somehow getting by the servo mechanism and also that it is pulsatile in nature, either pulsing between positive and zero or between positive and negative with a 180 degree phase difference, in order to make the woofer move as we see it moving. I mentioned that such servo devices are usually very effective in blocking DC. My Atma-sphere MP1 uses such a circuit to avoid the need for a coupling capacitor, and I have measured DC offset at no greater than 2mV. That is not enough to move a woofer, even if all of it did get straight through the ampifier to the speaker. Some SS amplifiers do pass DC, but they don't amplify DC. So, I am dubious that DC generated somehow from the cartridge is causing the problem. But it did occur to me today that maybe the servo in the OP's preamp is defective when operating in balanced mode. All bets are off.
So Weird- No Stylus Contact Woofer Pumping with Hana ML and Elac PPA-2
I observed the weirdest thing I have ever seen in audio. With the cartridge positioned above the record, tone arm locked up and platter spinning, the woofers were pumping on my system. I googled every permutation of query I could think of but came back with no hits. That’s when I decided to video the problem- link below:
I could type out all the details but the video pretty much covers everything. I thought ya’ll might be interested in this.
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@lewm It is not DC… by definition is like a sine wave or really more like a wavelet that is at a period of 33.3/60 of a second. If it was DC the cone would be pushed out, but the cone was “pumping” and that is a verb or action word that describes something that is not steady-state… and not what a blocking cap or servo is designed to control… assuming that they are used for steady-state control.
The thing is perfectly synced to the platter, and the signal has to be coming from the cart, or has to be coming from the ground. There is no other way the phone stage etc can make the speaker pump perfectly in sync with the platter. Maybe it could be an intermittent DC shift on the ground, but the “no vinyl” “No mat” discounts that. And a servo will not remove it. it is a conundrum. |
Agree @waltroman - but ignoring a solution, how does the static manifest itself into the signal wires? I would think that both the + and - wires would be elevated equally and in the balanced sense they should then cancel out with the CMRR of a balanced approach. |
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